On 2009-03-14 20:10:29 -0400, Karthik Gurusamy <kar1...@gmail.com> said:

On Mar 14, 3:03 am, Roman Medina-Heigl Hernandez <ro...@rs-labs.com>
wrote:
Karthik Gurusamy escribió:



On Mar 13, 6:39 pm, Roman Medina-Heigl Hernandez <ro...@rs-labs.com>
wrote:
Hi,

I'm experimenting with Python and I need a little help with this. What
 I'd
like is to launch an interactive shell, having the chance to send firs
t
several commands from python. I've written the following code:

============

#!/usr/bin/env python

import sys, subprocess

exe = "/bin/sh"
params = "-i"

-i says shell to be interactive. So looks like it is directly trying
to read from the terminal.

Well, then the question will be: is there any way to tell python to
directly "map" the terminal to the subprocess?

pexpect seems to be the solution for such problems :). [other
applications include ssh which asks for password from terminal (not
ssh's stdin)]

http://pexpect.sourceforge.net/pexpect.html


proc = subprocess.Popen([exe, params], stdin=subprocess.PIPE)

proc = subprocess.Popen([exe,], stdin=subprocess.PIPE)

works for me; but if there is an error 'sh' terminates.

If you want to simulate interactive, explore the pexpect module.

I'll get it a try :)))

proc.stdin.write("id\n")

while True:
        line = sys.stdin.readline()
        if not line:

note that a simple enter terminates the shell which you may not want.

Test my code and you'll see that this is not true :) When you hit enter
line will contain '\n' so it's not empty.

You are right. I thought readline() strips the trailing \n (It doesn't
and shouldn't as it's necessary for the case a file ends without a
newline).


                break
        proc.stdin.write(line)

Btw, another curiosity I have: is it possible to make a print not
automatically add \n (which is the normal case) neither " " (which happen
s
when you add a "," to the print sentence)?  I found an alternative not
using print at all, eg: sys.stdout.write("KKKKK"). But it resulted strang
e
to me having to do that trick :)

I am also aware of only the sys.stdout.write solution.

python3.0 has a way to do it.

help(print)
Help on built-in function print in module builtins:

print(...)
    print(value, ..., sep=' ', end='\n', file=sys.stdout)

    Prints the values to a stream, or to sys.stdout by default.
    Optional keyword arguments:
    file: a file-like object (stream); defaults to the current
sys.stdout.
    sep:  string inserted between values, default a space.
    end:  string appended after the last value, default a newline.

print('hello', end='')
hello>>>

Karthik


Thank you for all your comments and comprenhension.

-r



sys.exit()

============

The problem is that when I launch it, python proggy is automatically
suspended. The output I got is:

ro...@rslabs:~/pruebas$ ./shell.py
ro...@rslabs:~/pruebas$ uid=1000(roman) gid=1000(roman) groups=1
000(roman)
ro...@rslabs:~/pruebas$

[2]+  Stopped                 ./shell.py
ro...@rslabs:~/pruebas$

Why and how to fix it? Would you suggest a better and more elegant way
 to
do what I want?

As I see it, 'sh' is attempting to read from the keyboard and not from
stdin.

Karthik

Thank you.

--

Saludos,
-Roman

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Saludos,
-Roman

PGP Fingerprint:
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There is quite a bit involved in handling this. Check out this recipe on activestate:
http://code.activestate.com/recipes/278731/

- Joe

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